About the Rocky Run Library
Learn about the vision, mission, and guiding principles of the RRMS Library
Guiding Principles
- Everyone who enters the Rocky Run Library is entitled to a safe, welcoming space where their interests, identities, and beliefs are respected, encouraged, supported, and celebrated.
- We are committed to providing access to learning in a variety of ways: through lessons, hands-on activities, print and digital resources, as well as offering an inviting space for students to collaborate, study, explore, create, and grow.
- The library is a community space and everyone is welcome, whether you are a reader or not.
- We believe in Ranganathan’s (1932) 5 Laws of Library Science:
- Books are for use.
- Every reader his or her book.
- Every book its reader.
- Save the time of the reader.
- A library is a growing organism.
Vision
School: Together we create opportunities for personal growth and positive impact on our dynamic world.
What does this look like in our library?
- Teaching lessons about plagiarism, citations, sources, and copyright, among other topics
- Supporting students in exploring interests and demonstrating knowledge in unique ways using the Inspiration Studio and Tech Den
- Creating and maintaining meaningful collaborative partnerships with teachers, administrators, and the school community
- Providing timely, relevant professional development for staff
- Establishing the “why” at the onset of lessons with students and relevance of library skills to content they are learning
- Supporting and promoting Portrait of a Graduate skills
- Modeling innovative, best practice strategies and engagement techniques for staff
Mission
As a school, we are committed to:
- resiliency and lifelong learning
- engaging, relevant, and purposeful instruction
- supportive relationships that create a respectful, inclusive, and collaborative environment
- goal setting and reflection that develop individual strengths
- personal and academic integrity
What does this look like in our library?
- Developing genuine, positive relationships with students and staff
- Purchasing both fiction and nonfiction titles on a variety of topics
- Weeding outdated titles to keep the print collection accessible, relevant, and engaging
- Offering a variety of programming, contests, and other events to engage the school community
- Promoting and celebrating student voice through recommendations, displays, service hour opportunities, and more
- Designing meaningful, engaging collaborative lessons with all departments, aligning content, students' needs, information literacy skills and Portrait of a Graduate attributes
- Including formal and informal goal setting and reflection activities within and outside of collaborative instruction
- Raising awareness and accountability in ethical use of information and sharing of knowledge
- Cultivating responsibility when students lose and/or damage library books